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Toyota, Nissan recall 6.5 million more vehicles over air bag problem

In the latest recall, front passenger and front driver-side air bag inflators can deploy abnormally, or rupture, and put a person in a crash at greater risk.

Eugene Hoshiko/AP

The Toyota logo on a car is seen at Toyota's headquarters building in Tokyo, Friday, May 8, 2015.

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May 13, 2015

By Yuri KageyamaAssociated Press

Tokyo

Toyota Motor Corp. and Nissan Motor Co. are expanding their recalls over problem air bags made by Japanese supplier Takata Corp. by another 6.5 million vehicles.

Toyota said Wednesday it was recalling nearly 5 million more vehicles globally for the air bag inflator problem. Some 637,000 of the vehicles are in the United States. In Japan, it is recalling nearly 1.4 million vehicles.

The recall affects 35 models globally, including the Corolla subcompact, RAV4 sport utility vehicle and Tundra pickup, produced from March 2003 through November 2007.

In the latest recall, front passenger and front driver-side air bag inflators can deploy abnormally, or rupture, and put a person in a crash at greater risk.

This is different from an earlier problem with Takata air bag inflators that deployed with too much force, which has affected a range of automakers including Honda Motor Co., Chrysler, BMW and Ford Motor Co. At least six people have died worldwide due to that defect.

When combined with the earlier recalls, Toyota's Takata-related recalls have ballooned to 8.1 million vehicles.

Tokyo-based Honda, which has recalled the most vehicles because of Takata air bag problems, said it was studying the new problem and hasn't made a decision yet about expanding its recalls.

Nissan recalled an additional 1.56 million vehicles globally for the new Takata problem, with 326,000 of them in North America, 563,000 in Europe and 288,000 in Japan.

Nissan's Takata-related recalls have now grown to about 4 million around the world.

The latest affects the Sentra compact, Caravan van and X-Trail sport utility vehicle, made from 2004 through 2007, Nissan said. The automaker said it will test the inflators and replace them as needed.

Toyota said it will replace the problem inflators on the driver side with inflators made by Daicel Corp., another Japanese supplier.

Toyota will continue to use Takata "since we have not at this point identified parts from a different supplier that are compatible," the company said in a statement.

Takata has not been able to keep up with demand for replacement inflators.

NHTSA, the government authority in the US, which oversees recall, as well as Takata and the auto industry, have been trying to pinpoint what's causing the inflator problems.

"Toyota's focus remains on the safety and security of our customers," said Dino Triantafyllos, chief quality officer at Toyota Motor North America.

Takata has been fined $14,000 per day by NHTSA since Feb. 20 for allegedly dumping documents on the agency without the legally required explanation of what's in them. The fines have reached about $1 million.

Even before the latest recalls, 10 automakers recalled more than 17 million cars and trucks in the US and 22 million worldwide because of the Takata air bag problem. There could be as many as 30 million vehicles with Takata air bags in the US alone.

The Takata air bag problems began surfacing about a decade ago. Takata uses a different kind of inflator propellant from rivals, ammonium nitrate, which can burn too fast if subjected to prolonged exposure to airborne moisture.

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